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Fiscal & Monetary Policy Warm Up Look at pages 649, and 691 to answer these questions… 1. What is a progressive tax system? 2. How does it help stabilize the economy? 3. How does the federal gov’t use taxes to keep the economy stable? When does it lower and raise them? Tax Systems Progressive – Rich pay higher % of money than poor (our income tax) Regressive – Poor pay higher % of their income than rich (sales tax) Proportional – Everyone pays equal % Excise Tax – Tax on a particular type of item (cigarettes, alcohol, gas) What type of tax is this? 1. 5% tax on beer and wine. 2. State income tax 3. Sales tax on groceries 4. Everyone pays 10% of their income to the government. 5. Everyone pays an annual $50 tax Answer in your notes 1. 2. What type of tax system do you think is the most fair and why? Why do you think we have excise taxes on certain goods? What is the purpose of Fiscal and Monetary Polices? To ensure economic expansions and contractions are not too severe NOT What’s the difference? Fiscal Policy = actions Congress can take (spending, taxes, gov’t programs) Monetary Policy = controlled by the Federal Reserve (amount of $$, interest rates) Federal Reserve (“The Fed”) = central bank for U.S. Economic Problem: Inflation Prices are too high, people have too much money (and it’s not worth that much) So… the Goal is to DECREASE the amount of $ in the hands of consumers. We want contractionary or tight fiscal policy. (Make it smaller.) Fiscal Policy: Taxes (take $$ out of peoples wallets) Gov’t Spending (less gov’t programs) Welfare (transfer) payments (put less $$ into peoples’ wallets) Economic Problem: Unemployment (Recession) People don’t have ENOUGH money…and aren’t spending. So… the Goal is to INCREASE the amount of $ in the hands of consumers We want expansionary or loose fiscal policy. (Make it grow.) Fiscal Policy (Congress) Taxes (more $ left to spend) Gov’t Spending (more gov’t programs) Welfare (transfer) payments (more $ in your pocket) Fiscal Policy - Practice 1. Work on your own to complete as much of the “fiscal policy” side as you can. You have 10 minutes. If you aren’t sure of something, leave it blank. 2. Talk to a partner to help you fill in the blanks. You have 5 minutes. Civics and Economics Day 54 MONETARY POLICY Monetary Policy As a review: – The Gov’ts job is to regulate the economy (minimize the ups and downs). – Congress controls fiscal policy. • Including Taxes, government spending and Welfare payments. – The Federal Reserve controls monetary policy. • Supply of money, interest rates Economic Problem: Inflation Same problem as before… how does the Federal Reserve handle it? Monetary Policy (Federal Reserve) Interest (Discount) Rates Pay more interest on loans --> people borrow less --> have less to spend Reserve Ratio Banks have to keep more money in ‘reserve,’ less to lend out, less for people to spend Sell Bonds People buy bonds (investment) so less $ in their wallet to spend Economic Problem: Unemployment (Recession) Same problem… how does the Federal Reserve respond? Expansionary or loose monetary policy. (Make it grow.) Monetary Policy (Federal Reserve) Interest (Discount) Rates Low interest rates -> easier to borrow money -> people borrow $ to spend it -> more spending! Reserve Ratio Banks don’t have to keep as much money in reserve, more to lend out Buy Bonds Give people back their money with interest…more $ in their pockets to spend!